-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
screen4K.rc
177 lines (143 loc) · 5.83 KB
/
screen4K.rc
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
g $Id: screenrc,v 1.15 2003/10/08 11:39:03 zal Exp $
#
# /etc/screenrc
#
# This is the system wide screenrc.
#
# You can use this file to change the default behavior of screen system wide
# or copy it to ~/.screenrc and use it as a starting point for your own
# settings.
#
# Commands in this file are used to set options, bind screen functions to
# keys, redefine terminal capabilities, and to automatically establish one or
# more windows at the beginning of your screen session.
#B
#
# This is not a comprehensive list of options, look at the screen manual for
# details on everything that you can put in this file.
#
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# SCREEN SETTINGS
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
startup_message off
#nethack on
#defflow on # will force screen to process ^S/^Q
deflogin on
#autodetach off
# turn visual bell on
vbell off
vbell_msg " Wuff ---- Wuff!! "
# define a bigger scrollback, default is 100 lines
defscrollback 10000
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# SCREEN KEYBINDINGS
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Remove some stupid / dangerous key bindings
bind ^k
#bind L
bind ^\
# Make them better
bind \\ quit
bind K kill
bind I login on
bind O login off
bind } history
bind ' ' windowlist -b
# An example of a "screen scraper" which will launch urlview on the current
# screen window
#
#B
#bind ^B eval "hardcopy_append off" "hardcopy -h $HOME/.screen-urlview" "screen urlview $HOME/.screen-urlview"
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# TERMINAL SETTINGS
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# The vt100 description does not mention "dl". *sigh*
termcapinfo vt100 dl=5\E[M
# turn sending of screen messages to hardstatus off
hardstatus on
# Set the hardstatus prop on gui terms to set the titlebar/icon title
termcapinfo xterm*|rxvt*|kterm*|Eterm* hs:ts=\E]0;:fs=\007:ds=\E]0;\007
# use this for the hard status string
hardstatus string "%h%? users: %u%?"
# An alternative hardstatus to display a bar at the bottom listing the
# windownames and highlighting the current windowname in blue. (This is only
# enabled if there is no hardstatus setting for your terminal)
#
#hardstatus lastline "%-Lw%{= BW}%50>%n%f* %t%{-}%+Lw%<"
# set these terminals up to be 'optimal' instead of vt100
termcapinfo xterm*|linux*|rxvt*|Eterm* OP
# Change the xterm initialization string from is2=\E[!p\E[?3;4l\E[4l\E>
# (This fixes the "Aborted because of window size change" konsole symptoms found
# in bug #134198)
#termcapinfo xterm 'is=\E[r\E[m\E[2J\E[H\E[?7h\E[?1;4;6l'
# To get screen to add lines to xterm's scrollback buffer, uncomment the
# following termcapinfo line which tells xterm to use the normal screen buffer
# (which has scrollback), not the alternate screen buffer.
#
#termcapinfo xterm|xterms|xs|rxvt ti@:te@
# Enable non-blocking mode to better cope with flaky ssh connections.
defnonblock 5
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# STARTUP SCREENS
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Example of automatically running some programs in windows on screen startup.
#
# The following will open top in the first window, an ssh session to monkey
# in the next window, and then open mutt and tail in windows 8 and 9
# respectively.
#
# screen top
# screen -t monkey ssh monkey
# screen -t mail 8 mutt
# screen -t daemon 9 tail -f /var/log/daemon.log
#split -v
#screen
#focus
#screen -t vim 9 vim
#split
#focus
#screen
activity "%c activity -> %n%f %ti ^G"
#caption always "%{= Wk}%-w%{= Bw}%n %t%{-}%+w %-="
altscreen on
term screen-256color
#bind status bar on
bindkey -k k9 hardstatus alwaysignore
# F8 to turn the status bar off
bindkey -k k8 hardstatus alwayslastline
# B
# F5 and F6 to move one screen forward or backward
#bind F7 to change focus
bindkey -k k7 focus up
bindkey -k k5 prev
bindkey -k k6 next
#bindkey -k k8 source ~/bin/.screen
#bindkey -k k9 source ~/bin/.screen2
bind 'K' kill
bind 'W' windowlist
bind 'V' split -v
hardstatus alwaysignore
hardstatus alwayslastline
#hardstatus string "%w"
backtick 3 5 5 $SCRCONFIG/screen2.acpi
#backtick 0 0 1 /bin/date
backtick 1 60 60 $SCRCONFIG/screen.acpi # .screen.acpi contains 1 line: acpi | awk -F ', ' '{print $2} now df'
#hardstatus string '%{= kG}[ %{G}%H %{g}][%= %{= kw}%?%-Lw%?%{g}(%{W}%n*%f%t%?(%u)%?%{g})%{w}%?%+Lw%?%?%= %{g}][%{B} %m/%d/%y %{W}%c %{g} df:%1`%{-} ]'
#hardstatus string '%{= kG}[ %{G}%H %{g}][%= %{= Wk}%?%-Lw%?%{g}(%{Bw}%n*%f%t%?(%u)%?%{g})%{w}%?%+Lw%?%?%= %{g}][%{B} %m/%d/%y %{W}%c %{g} df:%1`%{-} ]'
#urxvt*font: xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono:size=11:autohinting=true
#hardstatus string '%{= kG}%-Lw%{= kW}%50> %n*%f %t%{= kG}%+Lw%< %{= kG}%-=%D %m/%d/%y | %C:%s %A | %1`%{-}'
hardstatus string "%{= Wk}%-w%{= Bw}%n*%f %t%{-}%+w cmd:%3 %-= %{= kG}%-=%D %m/%d/%y | %C %A | df:%1`%{-} "
#hardstatus string "%{= Wk}%-w%{= Bw}%n*%f %t%{-}%+w cmd:%3` %-= %{= kG}%-=%D %m/%d/%y | %C %A | df:%1`%{-} "
#hardstatus string "%{.kc}%-w%{.kw}%n*%t%{-}%+w %= %2` %3`/%4` %6`/%7` %5`/%9` %c %d/%m/%Y" #black+cyan+normal+white selected
#screen -s arda -p 0 -X stuff $'top\r'
##screen -aAxR -S arda #removeLine # Open first screen and launch first script
screen -t one4k 1 screenConnect one4k # .screenConnect contains 1 line: screen -aAxRD -S $1
split -v # Make second split
focus # Switch to second split
screen -t two4k 2 screenConnect two4k # Open second screen and launch second script
split -v
focus
screen -t three4k 3 screenConnect three4k # Open second screen and launch second script
split -v
focus
screen -t four4k 4 screenConnect four4k # Open second screen and launch second script